Startseite Fetal brain injury in experimental intrauterine asphyxia and inflammation in Göttingen minipigs
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Fetal brain injury in experimental intrauterine asphyxia and inflammation in Göttingen minipigs

  • Kristin Lyng , Berit H. Munkeby , David Scheie , Carina Mallard , Henrik Hagberg , Babill Stray-Pedersen , Ola Didrik Saugstad und J. Frederik Frøen
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 7. April 2006
Journal of Perinatal Medicine
Aus der Zeitschrift Band 34 Heft 3

Abstract

Objective: To examine fetal brain injury in the Göttingen minipig following intrauterine asphyxia and infection/inflammation induced at 3/4 of gestational length.

Methods: We performed laparotomy after anesthesia in six pregnant sows. We randomized 29 fetuses to one of four groups: pretreatment with saline or endotoxin followed by 30 min of umbilical cord occlusion or no occlusion. After 48 h we performed a re-laparotomy and examined the fetal brains.

Results: After total asphyxia, brain stem injury was present in the group pretreated with saline (P<0.01 vs. controls) and with endotoxin (P<0.005 vs. controls). Microglia activation was more marked in the brain stem (P<0.05) and posterior white matter (P<0.05) in the asphyxia group than in controls. Two of five fetuses in the asphyxia group had white matter injury, while no white matter lesions were found in the asphyxia/inflammation or endotoxin only groups.

Conclusions: In this Göttingen minipig model, a species closer to humans than animals commonly used in experimental studies of perinatal brain injuries, intrauterine asphyxia following pretreatment with saline caused brain stem and white matter injury. This model can be further developed to study the impact of other intrauterine exposures on brain injury.

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Corresponding author: Kristin Lyng Department of Pediatric Research Rikshospitalet The National Hospital N-0027 Oslo, Norway Tel.: +47-23 07 29 86 Fax: +47-23 07 27 80

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Published Online: 2006-04-07
Published in Print: 2006-05-01

©2006 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

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